The Jackson City Council will spend $1,200 on an audit of the Retro Metro project. As 16 WAPT News first reported in August, some City Council members want to know whether developers are wasting tax dollars on the project, which is designed to move six city departments into the old Belk building by the end of the month.

The project started raising a lot of questions for city leaders after the former developer, David Watkins, cut his ties to the project.

Before any city departments move into the building, city leaders want to make sure that $50,000 of tax money was used to install wires. Developer LeRoy Walker Jr. said the audit will prove to the city that Retro Metro is in compliance.

"The part that I'm pleased with as a managing partner is we're definitely in compliance and we'll meet the scope of work that they have allocated," Walker said.

Mayor Harvey Johnson said the audit should be wrapped up by the end of the month, which is about the same time developers said city departments should be allowed to move in.

The Obama administration will unveil a major climate change plan Monday aimed at a large reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from the nation's coal-burning power plants, a senior administration official told CNN.